Hennepin County Zero Waste Guide | 5
Recycling 101 Recycling has been in the news a lot lately due to shifts in markets and international policy changes. It’s important to know that your recycling is still getting recycled, and overall Minnesotans are good recyclers! The best ways to support recycling are to refresh your knowledge of what can be recycled, only recycle items that are accepted, and keep stuff that isn’t accepted out.
Do recycle
Paper
• Mail, office and school papers
• Magazines and catalogs
• Newspapers and inserts
• Phone books
Boxes:
• Cardboard
• Cereal and cracker boxes
• Shoe boxes, gift boxes and electronics boxes
• Toothpaste, medication and other toiletry boxes
Cartons
• Milk cartons
• Juice boxes
• Soup, broth and wine cartons
Glass
• Food and beverage bottles and jars
Plastic
Bottles and jugs:
• Water, soda and juice bottles
• Milk and juice jugs
• Ketchup and salad dressing bottles
• Dishwashing liquid bottles and detergent jugs
• Shampoo, soap and lotion bottles
Cups and containers:
• Yogurt, pudding and fruit cups
• Clear disposable cups and bowls
• Margarine, cottage cheese, and other containers
• Produce, deli and takeout containers
Metal
• Food and beverage cans
• Clean aluminum foil and pans
Preparing your recycling• Items should be clean and empty – give
them a quick rinse before recycling.
• Leave plastic caps on plastic bottles.
• Metal caps can be collected in a metal can – when it’s full, carefully squeeze the top of the can shut and place it in your recycling.
• Remove pumps from spray bottles.
• Flatten boxes.
• Don’t bag your recyclables – place them loose in your recycling cart.
• Try not to crush containers like milk jugs, juice cartons or cans. With modern sorting equipment, uncrushed containers are more likely to end up in the right spot.
Don’t recycle:
Aerosol cans
Batteries
Black plastic
Containers that held hazardous products (such as oil, paint, and pesticides)
Glass or ceramic dishes, drinking glasses, and vases
Gift wrap that is shiny or contains glitter or foil
Hoses, cords, and string lights
Large plastic items like laundry baskets, storage tubs, and toys*
Microwaveable food trays
Paper cups and plates**
Paper soiled with food, such as pizza boxes from delivery, napkins, and paper towels**
Plastic bags (accepted in many drop-off locations such as grocery and department stores)
Plastic foam (Styrofoam™)
Plastic utensils and straws
Random metal items like pots, pipes, and hangers*
Window glass and mirrors
An item with * is recyclable in some cities. Contact your city recycling coordinator for details. Find your city recycling coordinator’s contact information at hennepin.us/recycling
An item with ** may be accepted in organics recycling.
If you're not sure an item can be recycled, be sure to find out or throw it in the trash.
6 | Hennepin County Zero Waste Guide
Plastic bags
Plastic bags and wrap get tangled in the equipment at recycling sorting facilities and workers spend hours each day removing them. Plastic bags and wrap can be recycled if brought back to a retail drop-off location.
Keep your plastic bags separate and bring them to collection bins at the front of stores such as Cub Foods, Goodwill, JCPenney, Lunds & Byerlys, Kohl’s, Kowalski’s Markets, Target, Walmart, and metro area food co-ops.
Many types of plastic bags are accepted, including: retail, carryout, produce, newspaper, bread, dry cleaning, zip-top food storage, bubble wrap and air pillows (deflate), product wrapping on paper towels and bathroom tissue. Bags must be empty, clean, and dry. Learn more at plasticfilmrecycling.org.
Bags of recycling
Recycling in bags don’t get properly sorted at the recycling facility, and recyclers can’t tell what’s in the bag. Make sure to place your recycling loose in your recycling cart.
Large plastic items
Large plastic items like laundry baskets, storage bins, lawn furniture, and plastic toys, and other large plastic items can't be recycled. There are not good markets for recycling these items, and they are difficult to
sort at recycling facilities. Purchase high-quality items, use them for as long as possible, and donate items that are in good shape when you're ready to get rid of them.
Random metal items
Random metal items such as pots and pans, pipes, hangers, and tools can damage equipment and harm workers at recycling facilities. All metal can be recycled, just not in your recycling cart at home. Take
random metal items to a scrap metal recycler; find locations on the Green Disposal Guide at hennepin.us/greendisposalguide.
Propane tanks
Cylinders and tanks contain a compressed gas that makes them explosive and potential fire hazards. It is illegal to put propane tanks, helium tanks, and other pressurized cylinders in your household recycling or
trash. Properly dispose of all pressurized cylinders; find options on the Green Disposal Guide.
Single-use plastic utensils and straws
Plastic utensils and straws are too small and difficult to sort at recycling facilities, and there aren’t good recycling markets for them. Avoid them by choosing reusable options or refusing them when you can.
Paper plates, cups, and takeout containers
Paper cups, plates, and takeout containers can’t be recycled because they are often lined with plastic or contaminated with food. Avoid them by choosing reusable cups, mugs and plates.
Important items to keep out of your recycling cart (and what to do instead)
Hennepin County Zero Waste Guide | 7
Electronics and batteries
Electronics and batteries can’t be sorted properly at recycling facilities, and certain batteries can cause fires at facilities. But batteries and electronics should be recycled at drop-offs. Learn options for batteries and electronics on the Green Disposal Guide.
Cords and string lights
Keep “tanglers” like cords, hoses and string lights out of your recycling bin. As the name suggests, these items get tangled in the equipment at recycling facilities. You can recycle cords and string lights at Hennepin County drop-off facilities. Learn more on the Green Disposal Guide.
Needles and sharps
Needles and sharps should be managed and disposed of safely to prevent injury and disease transmission from needle-sticks. They should never be placed in your
recycling cart. Learn about disposal options on the Green Disposal Guide.
Small items
Anything smaller than 2” x 2”, or smaller than your fist, will not go through the recycling process well. Small items fall through the cracks of the sorting process and can end up contaminating other recycling streams, especially glass.
What happens to your recyclingRecycling starts at the curb with you separating your recyclables from trash so they can be picked up by your hauler.
The next step is processing. Haulers bring the recyclables to material recovery facilities (MRFs) to be sorted, graded, cleaned, and prepared for markets. Materials are sorted to remove contaminants that may damage processing equipment and graded to reclaim higher-value materials.
Various methods are used at MRFs to sort materials. Mechanical processes such as magnets, air jets, and screens use physical differences among materials, such as weight or magnetism, to sort them. Hand-sorting is used to sort materials that the mechanical methods cannot.
After the recyclables are processed at the MRF, the materials are sold to manufacturers that make them into a wide variety of new products. Paper is turned into a pulp and recycled back into paper, newspaper, boxes, napkins, paper towels, egg cartons and more. Glass is crushed, heated and recycled into glass bottles and jars or used in insulation, floor tile, road construction projects and more. Steel or aluminum is heated, melted and recycled back into steel or aluminum cans. Plastics are shredded, melted and recycled into a variety of products, including plastic bottles, carpet, furniture, clothing and more.
The final step in the recycling process is closing the recycling loop by buying products made from recycled materials.
Photo credit: Republic Services
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